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Windfall Tax


13 Nov 2022 00:00:00 | Update: 12 Nov 2022 22:17:25
Windfall Tax

A windfall tax is a tax levied by governments against certain industries when economic conditions allow those industries to experience significantly above-average profits. Windfall taxes are primarily levied on companies in the targeted industry that have benefited the most from the economic windfall, most often commodity-based businesses.

Oil and gas companies are common targets of windfall taxes. The massive net income increase for oil and natural gas producers—the International Energy Agency estimates they will double from 2021 to 2022, hitting an unprecedented $2 trillion—is the current trigger for the discussion and recent imposition of windfall taxes.

For example, on September 30, 2022, the Council of the European Union agreed to impose a "temporary solidarity contribution" on businesses in the crude petroleum, natural gas, coal and refinery sectors on profits that are "above a 20% increase of of the average yearly taxable profits since 2018." This is on top of whatever taxes they already owe in their individual countries. In each member state, proceeds are to help households and companies, and to ease the effects of high electricity prices.

And in October 2022, President Biden threatened that he would seek a windfall profits tax on oil and gas companies, which have reported very high profits and continue to charge high prices. He told them to use their "outrageous" bonanza—the effect of the Ukraine war—to expand oil supplies or reduce consumer prices.

As with all tax initiatives instituted by governments, there is always a divide between those who are for and those who are against the tax. The benefits of a windfall tax include proceeds being directly used by governments to bolster funding for social programs. Those against windfall taxes claim that they reduce companies' initiatives to seek out profits. They also believe that profits should be reinvested by companies to promote innovation that will, in turn, benefit society as a whole. Then there is the question of whether windfall taxes actually raise the amounts that are predicted. Consider the most recent example in the U.S., the Crude Oil Windfall Profit Tax of 1980, imposed by Congress during President Jimmy Carter's administration.

According to a 2006 report from the Congressional Research Service, the windfall profits tax (WPT) generated $80 billion in gross revenues between 1980 and 1988, "significantly less than the $393 billion projected. Due to the deductibility of the WPT against the income tax, cumulative net WPT revenues were about $38 billion, significantly less than the $175 billion projected." In a more current example, The Washington Post reports that the windfall tax in Italy had "(as of September [2022]) yielded only about one-fifth the income the government had hoped for."

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